Indian shooters Apurvi Chandela, Anjum Moudgil and Elavenil Valarivan will be vying for top honours at the year's third International Shooting Sport Federation (ISSF) World Cup Rifle/Pistol in Munich, Germany, starting Sunday. The opening day of the competition will see women's 10m Air Rifle final. A total of 919 athletes from 98 countries, some in the non-competition Minimum Qualifying Score (MQS) section, will be competing for the 17 Tokyo Olympics quota places available, besides a coveted ISSF World Cup medal. India has entered a 35-member squad, 23 of them competing for medals in the 10 events lined up over the next five days. India already has five quota places in Rifle and Pistol competitions. As a result they would be forfeiting their right to quotas in the women's air rifle and men's 10m air pistol competitions, given they have already secured the maximum possible two quotas in these events. India's other quota is in the men's 10m air rifle and thus the shooters would be ...

A vast collection of 1,300 unusual items from the iconic Supreme skateboard brand has gone up for auction in Hong Kong. Footage shot on Saturday shows the wide variety of merchandise, all featuring the iconic red background and white letters of the Supreme logo. Collector Yukio Takahashi is selling his huge collection in an online auction through Sotheby's and the items will be on display in Hong Kong's HART Hall until the auction closes on Tuesday. The New York based Supreme was established in 1994 and while it is chiefly a skateboard and clothing brand, it has also sold a wide variety of items such as the punching bag, camping equipment and pinball machine seen in the footage, many of which have been extensively resold as cult collectibles. Takahashi's collection, dubbed 'The Supreme Vault 1998-2018,' which he started in 2011, ranges from nunchucks, valued at HKD4,500 (€510, $570) to a motorcycle, valued at up to HKD70,000 (€7,950, $8,900). The supreme pinball machine is valued at HKD240,000 (€27,300, $30,500).